Anonymous wrote:why should you get to live in a neighborhood with no low income housing available? Why should only other neighborhoods have to have low-income housing?
And yes, I would expect that Oahu and Aspen have low-income housing available for those people that work in their community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your neighborhood school have less than 20% FARMS? Congratulations! Your neighborhood is now the #1 place for mixed-income housing development in DC!
You say the low-income housing just won't look right in your neighborhood? Please see the Ellen Wilson "project" within Brent's neighborhood as an exampleof mixed-income housing that can fit in beautifully in a community.
So are they going to bus in poor people into georgetown and foxhall
Aren't there jobs in those areas? Why wouldn't they be able to walk? And aren't there buses? Put this way, those nannies and waitresses that work in those. Eighborhoods, why shouldn't they ave the option to live in those neighborhoods? Isn't society better off if we don't have low income slums/high concentrations of poverty?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your neighborhood school have less than 20% FARMS? Congratulations! Your neighborhood is now the #1 place for mixed-income housing development in DC!
You say the low-income housing just won't look right in your neighborhood? Please see the Ellen Wilson "project" within Brent's neighborhood as an exampleof mixed-income housing that can fit in beautifully in a community.
So are they going to bus in poor people into georgetown and foxhall
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your neighborhood school have less than 20% FARMS? Congratulations! Your neighborhood is now the #1 place for mixed-income housing development in DC!
You say the low-income housing just won't look right in your neighborhood? Please see the Ellen Wilson "project" within Brent's neighborhood as an exampleof mixed-income housing that can fit in beautifully in a community.
So are they going to bus in poor people into georgetown and foxhall
Anonymous wrote:How about coming up with a solution that makes low-income earners better able to earn higher incomes?
Anonymous wrote:How about less increasing of low income housing and more getting people on their own feet?
Anonymous wrote:Does your neighborhood school have less than 20% FARMS? Congratulations! Your neighborhood is now the #1 place for mixed-income housing development in DC!
You say the low-income housing just won't look right in your neighborhood? Please see the Ellen Wilson "project" within Brent's neighborhood as an exampleof mixed-income housing that can fit in beautifully in a community.